Teaching South African center-based caregivers to implement augmentative and alternative communication strategies

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Date

Authors

Tonsing, Kerstin Monika
Dada, Shakila

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Abstract

In South Africa, many children with extensive support needs—including children who require AAC—are accommodated in care centers rather than the public schooling system. Caregivers employed at these centers need training in order to support children’s communication using augmentative and alternative methods. A total of 29 center-based caregivers took part in this study. A single group pretest-posttest design was used to evaluate the effect of a 5-day training workshop on caregivers’ ability to demonstrate and implement five AAC strategies. The effect of the workshop on caregivers’ perceptions of their own skills as well as the social validity of the training were also evaluated. Results suggest that the workshop effectively taught caregivers to demonstrate the skills in a simulated roleplay situation. A proportion of caregivers also supplied video footage after the workshop that suggests the ability to implement the strategies in the care center contexts. Caregivers also perceived their own skills to have improved post workshop, and evaluated the training positively.

Description

Keywords

Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), Center-based caregivers, Children in need of AAC, South Africa (SA), Training workshop, SDG-04: Quality education

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-04:Quality Education

Citation

Tönsing, K. & Dada, S. 2024, 'Teaching South African center-based caregivers to implement augmentative and alternative communication strategies', AAC: Augmentative and Alternative Communication, vol. 40, no. 3, pp. 208-218, doi : 10.1080/07434618.2023.2294741. .